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Old February 17, 2006, 05:22 PM   #6
threefivesevenmag
Senior Member
 
Join Date: May 8, 2005
Posts: 406
I think you should just work on dryfire practice. Learn your trigger and smooth it out. You don't need a video footage to show you where your red dot is shifting nor the distinctive audio clicks of your hammer falling.

Get someone to video you doing a live fire exercise or an IDPA match, then you'll really learn what you could improve upon because that's much more of an indicator of proper technique and handling.

Dryfire...just do it, video yourself doing something that tests more.
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